
Trust in TV network news brands appears to be tracking overall political momentum.
With few exceptions -- most notably gains by right-wing local news broadcaster Sinclair -- left-wing news
networks experienced the greatest gains since we conducted our first wave in August 2018 to
benchmark network TV news brand trust.
We planned to wait until after the midterms to conduct our second wave, but delayed it, due to the government shutdown and waited until after
the President’s State of the Union address and fielded it Feb. 6.
To determine how much the value of “trust” engendered when it came to individual news brands, 4,060 viewers
rated the brands watched regularly (3+ times a week) via the Brand Keys Emotional Engagement Brand Analysis.
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The top three ranking remained essentially unchanged with the BBC again in first
place, followed by Fox News and PBS.
The biggest gainers were "mainstream" or networks perceived as having a left-leaning orientation: CNN (+10 points), MSNBC (+7), CBS (+5), NBC
(+4) and ABC (+4).
While Sinclair isn’t a network newscaster, we began tracking it in wave one, because it has made a commitment to programming a strong right-wing political
news perspective across its local stations. The strategy appears to be paying off, as Sinclair’s trust level jumped 6 points between the two waves.
The biggest loser
wasn’t actually a news network, but a dominant source of network news coverage: President Trump. He lost three points.
In an Oval Office interview with The New York
Times reported on Feb. 1, President Trump, who has called himself “a victim” of unfair news coverage said: “I do notice that people are declaring more and more fake news, where
they go, ‘Fake news!’”
That said, the news trust perceptions of Americans appears to be going in the opposite direction, even among respondents who declared
themselves Republicans.
Respondents, examined by political affiliation, indicated the following “trust” levels in the President: Democrats 10% (-4%), Independents 19%
(-3%), and Republicans 30% (-5%). Nineteen percent (19%) had no opinion.